Support Animals

Just as a blind person has a service dog, lung cancer patients can have support dogs or other support animals. Yes, you can, really! An emotional support animal can have a wonderful effect on a lung cancer patient. There are many health benefits as well as emotional.

Benefits of Support Animals

Caring for the dog, walking the dog, playing with the dog – all of these give you an opportunity to get up and get moving without even realizing you are doing it. Let us be real – not everyone exercises and may be a couch potato (raising my hand over here). Just think of the day, if you already have a dog, and how often you get up to care for it, etc. It is amazing how much a support dog can help.

He/she is your friend when you need someone to talk to. A great snuggler, too. Any dog can be an emotional support animal. Click here for more information on getting documentation to make your pet an emotional support dog.

Per Wikipedia, an emotional support animal (ESA) is a “companion animal” animal that a medical professional has determined provides benefit for an individual with a disability. This may include improving at least one symptom of the disability. Emotional support animals, typically dogs, but sometimes cats or other animals, may be used by people with a range of physical, psychiatric, or intellectual disabilities. In order to be prescribed an emotional support animal the person seeking such an animal must have a verifiable disability. To be afforded protection under United States Federal Law, a person must meet the federal definition of disability and must have a note from a physician or other medical professional stating that the person has that disability and that the emotional support animal provides a benefit for the individual with the disability. An animal does not need specific training to become an emotional support animal.1

Is an Emotional Support Animal Right for You?

And let’s not forget – if you live somewhere that doesn’t allow pets, by having your emotional support dog documentation, they must let you have the animal, airlines must allow you to fly with your dog, restaurants must allow your dog in.

Americans who suffer from emotional or mental disability can qualify for an Emotional Support Animal (ESA). To get the qualification, the individual involved must have an emotional or mental disability that is certified by a mental health professional such as a psychiatrist, or any other mental health expert. In some locations, landlords and property managers do accept confirmation filled out by a certified family doctor. However, the best approach is to locate an appropriate mental health expert who can write such a letter.

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